The infant was so badly injured that she is now clinging to life at All Childrens’ Hospital in St. Petersburg.

Williams' parents are speaking out saying they tried several times to get the children out of harm’s way.

The grandparents say they called Citrus County deputies and the Department of Children and Families several times and now they are glad that the couple, including their own son, is locked up.

As they hold the 14-month-old girl in their arms, they are grateful she is doing OK but at the same time, they are praying their 5-week-old granddaughter will come out of this alive.

Rebecca and Allen Cecil told Bay News 9 they are glad their son and his girlfriend are locked up.

"Very angry, upset,” said Rebecca Cecil, the children’s grandmother. “Don't see how any mother could do this to a child, a baby that can't even defend itself. I mean, this one could at least crawl out of the way or try. That one couldn't do anything."

Both their son, Williams, and his girlfriend, Wood, are charged with aggravated child neglect. Wood is also charged with a second count of child abuse.

The proud grandparents showed Bay News 9 pictures from Facebook on Monday night. They are photos of their grandchildren showing them happy, lively, and doing what little kids do.

But deputies say behind the smiles of those children are a family’s sinister side.

Deputies say Wood abused both children. The five-week-old is suffering from bleeding on the brain, retinal hemorrhaging, as well as ribs and leg fractures.

Deputies say Wood denied doing anything intentional to hurt them.

The children’s grandparents say they've tried to get the parents help.

"We've had her on and off since she was born and we've tried to help them and get them to see people to get help themselves but they just refuse to do it,” said Allen Cecil, the children’s grandfather.

It was the 14-month-old's grandmother who found her at the couple's apartment last month standing in puddles of urine in her crib with her urine-soaked diaper down to her knees and covered, she said, with snot and vomit.

When deputies confronted Wood, they say she admitted the 14-month-old was in that condition soaked in urine.

Meantime, deputies say Williams admits he indeed made a mistake. He said that mistake was not caring for the 14-month-old.

"I want justice for this baby and for this one, too, and I sure don't want them to get the babies back," said Rebecca Cecil.

Both Wood and Williams face one count of aggravated child abuse.

Wood also faces a second count of child abuse in connection with the alleged abuse of her five-week-old girl.

A judge denied Williams and Wood bond since they are considered to be flight risks since both have left Citrus County in the past and both at times have been homeless.